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Tuyển tập các báo cáo nghiên cứu về y học được đăng trên tạp chí y học Critical Care giúp cho các bạn có thêm kiến thức về ngành y học đề tài: Public health, conflict and human rights: toward a collaborative research agenda. | Conflict and Health BioMed Central Open Access Debate Public health conflict and human rights toward a collaborative research agenda Oskar NT Thoms1 and James Ron 2 Address Undependent research consultant Ottawa Canada and 2Norman Paterson School of International Affairs Carleton University Ottawa Canada Email Oskar NT Thoms - oskar.thoms@mail.mcgill.ca James Ron - jron@connect.carleton.ca Corresponding author Published 15 November 2007 Received 9 July 2007 Conflict and Health 2007 1 11 doi 10.1186 1752-1505-1-11 Accepted 15 November 2007 This article is available from http www.conflictandhealth.com content 1 1 1 1 2007 Thoms and Ron licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http creativecommons.org licenses by 2.0 which permits unrestricted use distribution and reproduction in any medium provided the original work is properly cited. Abstract Although epidemiology is increasingly contributing to policy debates on issues of conflict and human rights its potential is still underutilized. As a result this article calls for greater collaboration between public health researchers conflict analysts and human rights monitors with special emphasis on retrospective population-based surveys. The article surveys relevant recent public health research explains why collaboration is useful and outlines possible future research scenarios including those pertaining to the indirect and long-term consequences of conflict human rights and security in conflict prone areas and the link between human rights conflict and International Humanitarian Law. Introduction In fall 2006 a controversial estimate of Iraqi war deaths published in the Lancet 1 made world headlines spurring a renewed round of debate over the ethics and consequences of the US-led Iraq invasion. The survey found that some 650 000 Iraqis were likely to have .